At the age of 16 Agnihotri entered the government-sponsored Thompson Engineering College in Roorkee, and in 1873 he took a position as a drawing master in the Government School of Lahore. He and his wife became active members of the Brahmo Samaj (literally, “Society of Brahma,” also translated as “Society of God”), a Hindu reform movement founded in Bengal. In 1882 Agnihotri resigned his teaching position to work full-time for the Brahmo Samaj. Eventually, he resigned from the Brahmo Samaj to form a new society, the Deva Samaj, which he ruled as deva guru (“divine teacher”). The Deva Samaj was at first a theistic society, but later it reemerged as an atheistic society, emphasizing ethical conduct and confession of sins but denying the existence of gods.

Agnihotri believed that an individual must rise to the higher life and, at a certain level, one ascends beyond spiritual danger. He himself was recognized by his followers as on the highest plane possible and was accorded many of the honours commonly paid to a deity.

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